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Zenodotus

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poetry, warranted more than a single title. When a title was lacking, Zenodotus had to unroll and pass an eye over the text. Such tags enabled the scrolls to be easily returned to the area in which they had been classified and also ensured that library users did not have to unroll each scroll in order to see what it contained. This was the first recorded use of
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In addition to his other scholarly work, Zenodotus introduced an organization system on the materials in the Library of Alexandria whereby texts were assigned to different rooms based on their subject matter (verse or prose, literary or scientific), and the various sub-classifications within each.
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In addition, library staff attached a small tag to the end of each scroll. These tags gave authors' names as well as other identification and had been added during the accessions procedure but often without a title; many a roll contained more than one work, and many works, such as compilations of
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Although he has been reproached with arbitrariness and insufficient knowledge of Greek, his recension undoubtedly laid a sound foundation for future criticism. Having collated the different manuscripts in the library, he expunged or obelized doubtful verses, transposed or altered lines, and
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introduced new readings. It is probable that he was responsible for the division of the Homeric poems into twenty-four books each, and possibly was the author of the calculation of the days of the
99:. In 284 BC, the Ptolemaic court appointed Zenodotus as the first Director of the library and also the official tutor to the royal children. His colleagues in the librarianship were 425: 633: 541: 518: 406: 411: 152:") probably formed the source of the explanations of Homer attributed by the grammarians to Zenodotus. He also lectured upon 107:, to whom were allotted the tragic and comic writers respectively, Homer and other epic poets being assigned to Zenodotus. 623: 203:
by the first letter of the name of their author. The principle of the alphabetic organization was introduced by Zenodotus.
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Zenodotus, of Ephesus. (1995). In Merriam Webster's Encyclopedia of Literature. Springfield, MA: Merriam-Webster.
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Zenodotus was the first superintendent of the Library of Alexandria and the first critical editor (
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Casson, L. (2001). Libraries in the Ancient World. Ann Arbor, MI: Edwards Brothers. p. 37
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Casson, L. (2001). Libraries in the Ancient World. Ann Arbor, MI: Edwards Brothers. p. 37
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Casson, L. (2001). Libraries in the Ancient World. Ann Arbor, MI: Edwards Brothers. p. 37
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He does not appear to have written any regular commentary on Homer, but his Homeric
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This article is about the grammarian. For the Neoplatonist philosopher, see
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There appear to have been at least two other grammarians of the same name:
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This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
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Hist. of Class. Schol. (1906), ed. 2, vol. i. pp. 119–121.
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Geschichte der griechischen Litteratur in der Alexandrinerzeit
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Within their subjects, Zenodotus organized the works
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Index

Zenodotus (philosopher)
Zenodotus (Stoic)
Greek
Greek
grammarian
literary critic
Homeric scholar
librarian
Library of Alexandria
Ephesus
Philitas of Cos
Ptolemies
Homer
Alexander of Aetolia
Lycophron of Chalcis
Iliad
Tabula Iliaca
glōssai
glosses
Hesiod
Anacreon
Pindar
Suda
Greek Anthology
alphabetically
metadata
Alexandrine grammarians
Homeric scholarship
Crates
Aristarchus of Samothrace

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